decorator
pyodide
decorator | pyodide | |
---|---|---|
1 | 67 | |
813 | 11,473 | |
- | 2.3% | |
3.5 | 9.7 | |
2 months ago | 6 days ago | |
Python | Python | |
BSD 2-clause "Simplified" License | Mozilla Public License 2.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
decorator
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Python Malware Starting to Employ Anti-Debug Techniques
that doesn't make much sense and there are necessary uses for eval() /exec(), mostly for dynamic creation of code:
For example here's Python dataclasses in the standard library using exec() to create the `__init__` and other methods that go on your dataclass:
https://github.com/python/cpython/blob/main/Lib/dataclasses....
Here's Pydantic using it for a jupyter notebook check:
https://github.com/pydantic/pydantic/blob/594effa279668bd955...
here's Pytest using it to rewrite modules so that functions like assert etc. are instrumented by pytest:
https://github.com/pytest-dev/pytest/blob/eca93db05b6c5ec101...
Here's the decorator module using it (as is the only way to do this in Python) to create a signature matching decorator for an arbitrary function:
https://github.com/micheles/decorator/blob/ad013a2c1ad796996...
All of these libraries are completely secure as eval/exec are used with code fragments that are generated by the libraries, not based on untrusted input.
eval() /exec() are not running executable files, just Python code, the same way all the rest of the package is already doing.
pyodide
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Py2wasm – A Python to WASM Compiler
We implemented an in-browser Python editor/interpreter built on Pyodide over at Comet (our users are data scientists who need to build custom visualizations quite often, and the most familiar language for most of them is Python).
One of the issues you'll run into is that Pyodide only works by default with packages that have pure Python wheels available. The team has developed support for some libraries with C dependencies (like scikit-learn, I believe), but frameworks like PyTorch are particularly thorny (see this issue: https://github.com/pyodide/pyodide/issues/1625 )
We ended up rolling out a new version of our Python visualizations that runs off-browser, in order to support enough libraries/get the performance we need: https://www.comet.com/docs/v2/guides/comet-ui/experiment-man...
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Show HN: Open-source, browser-local data exploration using DuckDB-WASM and PRQL
Thank you! Yes, one of the items in the Roadmap is support for Pyodide (https://github.com/pyodide/pyodide) for running in-browser python on the results of each of the code blocks! This should allow most ML libs to be usable in-browser! This is pretty high-up on our priority list.
- Show HN: Marimo – open-source reactive Python notebook – running in WASM
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Why Are Tech Reporters Sleeping on the Biggest App Store Story?
If I understand correctly, WASM only makes sense for compiled languages, you can run the python interpreter in WASM of course[1], but that will be at a significant performance disadvantage to the native javascript interpreter, and it's also something that has to be loaded every time you load the website.
[1]: https://github.com/pyodide/pyodide
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Rewrite Sympy in rust
If you absolutely need something comparable to Sympy, then one option might be to figure out how to best call Sympy from Rust. e.g. - RustPython, although it seems like Sympy isn't supported yet - Pyodide, and figuring out how to run it outside of a web browser. Probably also not very easy. - PyPy, and having a pretty simple Python binary for every platform - ...
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IT department refuses to let me install Python and other programs/languages I need for my job.
For running programming languages other than JavaScript in the browser there is Emscripten and WebAssembly. There is v86, where a Linux build is compiled to WASM. Folks have written QuickJS into a Linux build compiled to WASM, Node.js into the Linux buildroot https://github.com/cemalgnlts/now, so Python or CPython can be written to the image and loaded into the browser as WASM as well https://github.com/pyodide/pyodide.
- Python CLI Live Demo?
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Graphs in Python web app
There's a Python runtime that runs on WebAssembly (https://github.com/pyodide/pyodide). I have no idea what it's like, I've never used it.
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Sunday Daily Thread: What's everyone working on this week?
Still in a quest to provide some tooling to quickly compose documentation websites: https://github.com/synw/docdundee . As I have tons of libs to document and was tired of managing restructured language for readthedocs I started with this, and now it has executable Python examples in the frontend via a Pyodide wrapper composable: usePython
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Introducing scikit-learn-ts: A powerful machine learning library for TS, auto-generated and powered by Python's #1 ML library
This project's brand new and a lil hacky, but I've already reached out to the scikit-learn team, and they recommended that I experiment with using Pyodide as an alternative backend for the Python bridge.
What are some alternatives?
CPython - The Python programming language
brython - Brython (Browser Python) is an implementation of Python 3 running in the browser
pytest - The pytest framework makes it easy to write small tests, yet scales to support complex functional testing
pyscript - Try PyScript: https://pyscript.com Examples: https://tinyurl.com/pyscript-examples Community: https://discord.gg/HxvBtukrg2
thonny - Python IDE for beginners
RustPython - A Python Interpreter written in Rust
act - Run your GitHub Actions locally 🚀
streamlit - Streamlit — A faster way to build and share data apps.
Transcrypt - Python 3.9 to JavaScript compiler - Lean, fast, open! -
PyWebIO - Write interactive web app in script way.
opencv_py
jupyterlite - Wasm powered Jupyter running in the browser 💡